
Devin Ruttan-Stokes
27 posts



One of the worst parts of DEI is that it makes many people assume that anyone who isn’t a white male is incompetent (see some of the comments on the original post, for instance). DEI is not only racist itself but it encourages people to react to it with more racism.

Father Exposes CBC Bias in Humboldt Broncos Tragedy: “They’ve Been Notorious for This” “It’s not your story to tell,” says former NHL player Chris Joseph, who lost his son in the Humboldt Broncos tragedy in 2018 when foreign truck driver Jaskirat Sidhu blew through a stop sign and killed 16 people, including his son, Jaxon Joseph. Joseph repeated his accusations against CBC of being biased in favour of Sidhu, who is fighting his deportation order after serving merely 3.5 years in prison for causing the deaths of 16 people and injuring 13 Canadians through his negligence. “Let everybody speak, but don’t chop and edit to narrate the story the way you want it to be done. @karenpaulscbc did that with CBC. She played soft music when the Sidhus were walking through the park holding hands together, and then when she interviewed Russ Herold, who was on my side, it was a cold ring via Zoom call. She just doesn’t give the same attention to detail. I wish mainstream media would grow a backbone and tell it like it is,” @cjoseph23 said.



Hell, the people that founded Anglo Canada did so specifically beside they did not wish to be anything *but* British. That was the whole point!


🚨 EXCLUSIVE: CBC archived negative responses to its Humboldt coverage, forwarded them to security specialist Link in thread 🧵





King Charles: I cannot help noticing the readjustments to the East Wing. I'm sorry to say that we British of course made our own small attempt at real estate redevelopment of the White House in 1814.



King Charles: I cannot help noticing the readjustments to the East Wing. I'm sorry to say that we British of course made our own small attempt at real estate redevelopment of the White House in 1814.



After Pradeep Ananth, his wife, Monali, and their young son, Kabir, arrived in Toronto from India, they did what Canada tells skilled newcomers to do: they put down roots. They paid taxes, opened bank accounts, signed leases, enrolled their son in school and community-centre programs, made friends and built a Canadian life. Kabir learned to love his teachers, the library, swimming, piano, basketball and a well-rounded childhood “We pictured him growing up Canadian,” Ananth writes in a memoir for Maclean’s. But when when anxiety over housing and affordability soured public opinion on immigration, Ottawa slashed its intake targets. For Pradeep, the dream of permanent residency fell out of reach. “The country where we were putting down roots didn’t have room for us after all,” he writes. “And we had to leave.” macleans.ca/longforms/almo…


@HoCStaffer All nations should determine their sustainable population level that respects food/energy security, farms/nature space, and encourage/discourage family population growth accordingly. While trying to maintain a balanced demographic (age) mix. Regulated immigration if needed










